Haren gave up a two-run homer to Jonathan Lucroy in the first and then a three-run double to him in the second. The Dodgers had batted only once and already trailed Lucroy, 5-0.

Haren (10-10) gave up one more in the third and called it a day, having already thrown 74 pitches.

He now returns to Dan Haren, dilemma.

Haren had gone 0-5 with a 10.03 earned-run average in five consecutive starts and appeared a major candidate to lose his spot in the rotation. Then he came back with two excellent outings (2-0, 2.03), while starters Josh Beckett (hip) and Hyun-Jin Ryu (buttock), and back-up starter Paul Maholm (knee surgery), all went to the disabled list.

The Dodgers already have a five-man pitching rotation that includes new additions Roberto Hernandez and Kevin Correia, and there’s little left to replace Haren.

One candidate could be Carlos Frias, who took over for Haren on Sunday. After allowing a solo home run to his first batter (Carlos Gomez), Frias retired his last 12 consecutive batters.

The home run was the only hit he allowed, and he did not walk a batter in his four innings. He struck out two.

Haren was charged with six runs (three earned) on five hits and three walks in his three quick innings.

Meanwhile, Milwaukee continued to stifle the Dodgers’ offense. This time it was Wily Peralta’s turn to look like Cy Young material, holding the Dodgers scoreless on five hits in his easy six innings.

The Dodgers avoided the shutout when they scored twice against Marco Estrada in the eighth. Back-to-back leadoff doubles by Andre Ethier scored one, and two outs later, ex-Dodger Elian Herrera lost Darwin Barney’s drive in the sun for another run-scoring double.